Education Gadfly Weekly

Volume 4, Number 33

September 16, 2004

Teacher policy follies: ten top errors

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / September 16, 2004

Every person in America wants every child in America to have a terrific teacher every year. That much we can assume. Why, then, is it so hard to craft sound policies yielding that universally sought result? Excellent question. My answer is that we've made ten basic mistakes:

  1. Out of deference to adult preferences rather than what's best for children, we've opted for quantity rather than quality, for hiring more teachers instead of demanding (and paying for) better ones. NEA data show that, for every 20 additional students enrolled in American K-8 schools over the last 10 years, we hired three more elementary school classroom teachers. Take a longer view and the numbers astound: between 1955 and 2000, the number of K-12 teachers in the U.S. almost tripled while enrollments rose by half. Instead of paying a smaller number of people more money, we opted to pay lots more teachers a more-or-less constant wage. We surely could have found ways to place better educated and better compensated instructors in our classrooms if we hadn't set out to hire so many millions of them. Why did we do that? There's a provocative economist's theory about changing labor markets, particularly for high-ability women (see, for example, Darius Lakdawalla's terrific piece in Education Next.) But there's also a simpler

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    Teacher policy follies: ten top errors

NCLB trifecta

September 16, 2004

The American Enterprise Institute's Frederick M. Hess and our own Checker Finn have three new and overlapping analyses of the No Child Left Behind Act, with particular reference to that law's accountability and choice provisions. The book version, which was edited by Hess and Finn and contains contributions from fifteen other authors, is Leaving No Child Behind? Options for Kids in Failing Schools. If you haven't got time for the full volume, you can read its major conclusions in the September edition of Phi Delta Kappan (click here for more). And, if you've not yet gotten your fill, check out the fall 2004 edition of The Public Interest, where they examine NCLB in broader perspective in "On Leaving No Child Behind." The bottom line: this historic law can work and must work, but there's no point in stubbornly insisting that it will work perfectly as first enacted (or that more money is the answer). Big, complex laws and programs normally need calibrating. In this case, some NCLB provisions should be tightened, others made more flexible. These studies are by no means the last word; they are, in fact, primarily glimpses of and reflections on the law's early implementation.

Leaving No Child Behind? Options for Kids in Failing Schools, Frederick M. Hess and Chester E. Finn, Jr., Palgrave MacMillan, ISBN: 1403965889

"Inflating life rafts of NCLB," Frederick M. Hess and Chester

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NCLB trifecta

Happy ending for the CCA kids

September 16, 2004

The unfortunate saga of the California Charter Academy, closed for various improprieties last month (click here and here for more), has something like a happy ending. Of the 3,300 K-12 students left stranded by CCA's closure (far fewer than the 10,000 originally claimed), 2,600 have been enrolled in other local charter schools. This good news comes after a Herculean effort by Caprice Young's California Charter Schools Association, which vowed to find openings for as many of those students as possible. It's heartening to know that some people, amidst the mess and recrimination that followed CCA's implosion, kept their eye on the kids.
 
"It's back to school for 2,600 displaced students," by Erika Hayasaki, Los Angeles Times, September 14, 2004

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Happy ending for the CCA kids

Tinkering toward true merit pay

September 16, 2004

Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty announced this week that three schools in the Land of 10,000 Lakes will pilot a new teacher pay-for-performance plan that he hopes will pave the way toward more ambitious merit pay schemes down the road. According to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, the plan includes: $5,000 for teachers who serve as mentors; $8,000 in raises for master teachers, who assist with teacher training, evaluation and student achievement analysis; and $2,500 to $3,000 in bonuses awarded to teachers based on evaluations of their teaching and how much they boost student achievement. Pawlenty, whose more ambitious proposal to pay "super teachers" up to $100,000 a year (read more here) died in the state's 2004 legislative gridlock, is optimistic about this first step. "My view is that we want to change the whole system. But you can't do that overnight. . . . We want to move more toward a performance-pay plan, and this is a step in the right direction."

"State will test teacher merit pay," by Norm Draper, Minneapolis Star-Tribune, September 14, 2004

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Tinkering toward true merit pay

It's the achievement gap, stupid!

September 16, 2004

Ask most parents to rate the American education system compared to the rest of the industrialized world, and they'd no doubt tell you it is second to none. According to the 2004 edition of the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)'s Education at a Glance report, however, this basic assumption of American educational excellence has grown shaky. (To read our take on last year's results, see "Facing Facts.") The U.S. does still have the world's highest college completion rate among those aged 44+. But among ages 25-44, America now ranks 10th - not because our numbers are decreasing, but because others are catching up. Perhaps more troubling, the U.S. ranks just slightly above average in reading performance, below average in math achievement, and below average in high school completion rates, compared to the rest of the industrialized world. This despite spending more per student on all levels of education. Barry McGraw, OECD director of education, observes that "The best in the U.S. is as good as the best in the world. What drags you down is the worst performers."

Education at a Glance 2004, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

"Report: U.S. slips in education ratings," by Ben Feller, Associated Press, September 14, 2004

"U.S. teens have big hopes, average skills," by Greg Toppo, USA Today, September 14, 2004

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It's the achievement gap, stupid!

A Straightforward Comparison of Charter Schools and Regular Public Schools in the United States

Chester E. Finn, Jr. / September 16, 2004

Caroline M. Hoxby, Harvard University and National Bureau of Economic Research September 2004

Harvard economist Caroline M. Hoxby has just issued the most effective rejoinder to the misleading AFT "study" of charter school achievement that's been much in the news of late: she's done a far better study, and it yields far different results. Whereas the AFT relied on a small NAEP sample of charter schools and had no way to compare their students' performance with that of similar youngsters in similar communities, Hoxby obtained 4th grade achievement data for 99 percent of all charter students and compared them with similar test results from the geographically nearest district-operated school or, in some circumstances, a school that's not quite as close in miles but closer in racial composition. Moreover, the measure she used is one that actually counts for children and schools: the percentage of youngsters in a school who attain proficiency on their state's test according to their state's standards (in 2002-3). For the country as a whole, she found, "Charter school students are 3.8 percent more likely to be proficient on their state's reading examination when compared to students in the nearest public school. They are 4.9 percent more likely . . . when compared to students in the nearest public school with a similar racial composition." (The corresponding "charter advantage" in math is 1.6 and 2.8 percent.) On the whole, she concludes, "The average charter school student in the

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A Straightforward Comparison of Charter Schools and Regular Public Schools in the United States

The Teachability Index: Can Disadvantaged Students Learn?

Kathleen Porter-Magee / September 16, 2004

Jay Greene and Greg Forster, The Manhattan InstituteSeptember 2004

Jay Greene and Greg Forster of the Manhattan Institute released this study last week, ostensibly an answer to the work of Richard Rothstein and others who argue that social factors make it all but impossible to close achievement gaps via education reform, and that reformers should instead focus on fixing those underlying social problems. To test that theory, the authors create a "teachability index," which uses factors of school readiness, community, race, economics, health, and family to determine how "teachable" students are, then ranks states according to their students' teachability. In addition, using state student achievement data, the authors rank the states according to how efficient their schools are, i.e., how well their students perform when compared with the achievement level predicted by their teachability and state education spending. Interestingly, Greene and Forster find that "States with low scores on the [teachability] index do not inevitably produce low-performing students, and states with high scores do not inevitably produce high-performing students." Thus, they argue, social factors and school spending do not necessarily predetermine the level at which students can achieve, and therefore increasing spending or targeting these social problems will not necessarily yield higher achievement. Critics will quibble with the factors Greene and Forster chose to include in their index and, as the authors note, it's "only a rough indicator of student teachability." One also wonders whether engaging in the "teachability" debate may

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The Teachability Index: Can Disadvantaged Students Learn?

Open the Preschool Door, Close the Preparation Gap

September 16, 2004

Sara Mead, Progressive Policy InstituteSeptember 2004

In this concise report, Sara Mead makes a strong case for effective preschool programs. Culling information from multiple studies, she argues that universal access to high-quality preschools could take us a long way toward closing racial and socio-economic achievement gaps. The core of her report is a specific proposal for universal preschool access. This could be pricey, Mead admits, but making it free for poor families and then increasing the burden for others on a sliding scale would be affordable - well, maybe $8.1 billion a year. (A billion here, a billion there....) Although Mead emphasizes the need for state-by-state flexibility in curriculum and other matters, she also thinks this federal money should come with accountability strings attached. Whatever the likelihood of such a program being instituted, Mead has put a coherent model on the table. Policy makers would do well to read her discussions of the preschool programs already implemented in Georgia and Oklahoma. A recent study of the latter, for example, found remarkable gains - 17 and 54 percent, respectively - in the cognitive and language assessment scores of African American and Hispanic children. You can find it here.

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Open the Preschool Door, Close the Preparation Gap

Announcements

March 25: AEI Common Core Event

March 21, 2013

While most discussion about the Common Core State Standards Initiative has focused on its technical merits, its ability to facilitate innovation, or the challenges facing its practical implementation, there has been little talk of how the standards fit in the larger reform ecosystem. At this AEI conference, a set of distinguished panelists will present the results of their research and thoughts on this topic and provide actionable responses to the questions that will mark the next phase of Common Core implementation efforts. The event will take place at the American Enterprise Institute in D.C. on March 25, 2013, from 9:00AM to 5:00PM. It will also be live-streamed online. For more information and to register, click here.

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